MORE 'NONFICTION' POSTS
Reading hard history builds empathy and intercultural competence. It allows young people to understand new and different perspectives.
We need scientists, and we need diversity in science, and we need books for kids, and we need citizen science projects, but most of all…we need hope.
The more I researched the bewildering problems facing our planet, the more I kept bumping into an unlikely hero—seaweed.
Author Elaine Kachala talks about her nonfiction title which explores wearable technology
The authors talk about their shared love of nonfiction and their new books.
Historical fiction helps [kids] see that the past is closer to the present than they ever imagined, that the lives of people who lived long ago are not so different from their own.
It is hard work to question everything, but our survival and the survival of democracy depend on moral courage, independent thinking, and fair-mindedness. Is there anything more important?
During the middle school years, kids are in different phases of development, navigating puberty, exploring their identities, and transitioning from childhood into young adulthood. To say a lot is going on would be an understatement.
In good historical fiction, nothing is "made up." L. M. Elliott explains in this blog tour stop for her new book, Louisa June and the Nazis in the Waves.
A fascinating crash course in the politics and race relations of the time told through the lens of the Green Book of the 1930s to 60s.
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